President Trump disavowed former advisor Steve Bannon today, saying that Bannon has "lost his mind." We talk about the implications of the split, the possibility of a government shutdown later this month, and other top stories with a Washington reporter.

Law enforcement agencies in central Wisconsin are raising money to send local officers to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington when the name of a local officer is added to the monument.

In a meeting with White House officials Wednesday, the Republican-led Congress set an infrastructure plan and welfare reform as top priorities for 2018. Lawmakers also must pass a budget bill to avoid a federal government shutdown.

The Red Cross was criticized last week for a new policy stating volunteers would not meet fire victims at their homes in some Milwaukee zip codes where mostly African-Americans and Latinos live, instead the volunteers would meet fire victims at local police or fire stations, or a Red Cross office.

The National Weather Service has issued cold weather warnings for record-low temperatures from South Texas to Canada and from Montana to New England. We talk to an expert about what is behind the extreme cold hitting most of the United States.

Decades of public awareness campaigns have made screenings for diseases like cancer seem like a good thing. But some researchers say there's an epidemic of "overdiagnosis" in America's older adults, which sometimes does more harm than good.

For residents who live near Mid-America Steel Drum, the air conditions could be more than a nuisance. A Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation found that the air could be making people sick — from nasal problems, to headaches, dizziness, and numbness in the fingers and toes.

A new federal study links the opioid crisis to the jump in homicides in 2015 and 2016, both in Milwaukee and in cities nationwide. A Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reporter joins us to share how the results may change the narrative of violence in the city.